Plaintiff T.J. Simers was a well-known and sometimes controversial columnist for Los Angeles Times Communications LLC. In August 2013, plaintiff was demoted to a senior reporter. Shortly thereafter, he obtained a position as a columnist with a rival newspaper and filed this action against The Times for constructive termination and age and disability discrimination in violation of the Fair Employment and Housing Act (FEHA; Gov. Code, § 12900 et seq.).
There have been three jury trials in this case.
In the first trial, the jury found defendant was liable for both discrimination and constructive termination. The jury awarded plaintiff $2,137,391 in economic damages for harm caused by his constructive termination, and $5 million in noneconomic damages, without identifying which noneconomic damages were caused by the constructive termination and which were caused by the discrimination. The trial court granted defendant’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict (JNOV) on plaintiff’s constructive termination claim and granted a new trial on noneconomic damages.
Both parties appealed. The Court of Appeal affirmed the trial court’s orders and remanded the case for a new trial on damages for plaintiff’s demotion. (Simers v. Los Angeles Times Communications LLC (2018) 18 Cal.App.5th 1248 (Simers).)
In the second trial, the jury awarded plaintiff $15.4 million in noneconomic damages. The trial court, however, granted defendant’s motion for a new trial on two grounds.
In the third trial, again the only issue was the amount of noneconomic damages plaintiff could recover for his demotion. Plaintiff’s counsel asked the jury to return a verdict between $30 and $50 million, and defense counsel argued that an award between $500,000 and $1 million was reasonable. The jury returned a verdict of $1.25 million. The jury’s verdict was the exact amount of an offer defendant made on December 7, 2021, shortly before the third trial began, to settle under Code of Civil Procedure section 998 (section 998).
In June 2022, defendant paid plaintiff $1,292,123.29 in partial satisfaction of the judgment.
In May 2022, plaintiff filed a motion for attorney fees, requesting fees of more than $15.5 million. This consisted of $7,860,475, based on hours spent multiplied by hourly rates (the “lodestar” amount), with a 2.0 multiplier based on contingent risk and other factors. The time spent included time on all three trials and on the appeals after the first trial.Plaintiff claimed costs of $577,890.29.
Defendant opposed the attorney fee motion. Among other contentions, defendant argued that section 998 precluded any fee recovery after the December 7, 2021 section 998 offer; that plaintiff could not recover fees for work on the second trial because that would reward plaintiff for his counsel’s egregious misconduct; and that plaintiff could not recover fees for the appeals after the first trial because he did not prevail on his appeal and this court’s disposition stated that the parties would bear their own costs.
The trial court awarded plaintiff $3,264,906 in attorney fees. The court granted defendant’s motion to tax costs in part, allowing plaintiff to recover $210,882.55 in costs. The defendant and the plaintiff both appealed. After the briefs were filed in these appeals, plaintiff T.J. Simers passed away. The motion of Virginia Simers, the sole beneficiary and executor of Mr. Simers’s will, to substitute herself as plaintiff was granted.
The Court of Appeal found “no abuse of discretion in any part of the trial court’s order” in the published case of Simers v. Los Angeles Times Communications LLC -B323715 (August 2024)
The primary issue is the defendant’s contention that the plaintiff should not have recovered any fees for counsel’s work on the second trial, because the third trial was necessitated by counsel’s misconduct in closing argument at the second trial. Defendant also challenges fees awarded for certain work on plaintiff’s unsuccessful appeal after the first trial.
Plaintiff contends he should recover his attorney fees for this appeal, despite the trial court’s order that he cannot recover any fees or costs incurred after he rejected the defendant’s offer of compromise on December 7, 2021, shortly before the third trial, and failed to obtain a more favorable judgment.
“Section 998 expressly requires the court to exclude postoffer costs in determining whether the plaintiff has obtained a more favorable judgment than the offer. (§ 998, subd. (c)(2)(A).) That is exactly what the trial court did.”
The Court off Appeal said it “cannot find any failure to ‘adequately’ or ‘independently’ consider the factors defendant raises. The court clearly stated that it considered the misconduct that necessitated a third trial in making its award of fees that ‘as a whole are reasonable.’ We find no basis to conclude the trial court abused its discretion.”